Crude storage is filling fast as demand tumbles, piling pressure on oilpatch - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:42 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Business

Crude storage is filling fast as demand tumbles, piling pressure on oilpatch

From Oklahoma to Alberta and around the globe, oil storage is filling quickly flowing into tank farms, tanker ships and salt caverns.

'It's happening at lightspeed,' market watcher says

Oil storage tanks are shown at the SemCrude tank farm north of Cushing, Okla. An Energy Department report shows U.S. oil storage is at its highest level in 80 years. (Michael Wyke/Associated Press)

From Oklahoma to Alberta and around the globe, oil storage is filling quickly flowing into tank farms, tanker ships and salt caverns.

"Or swimming pools," as one analystjoked lastweek.

The laughs are rarethese days.

Oil prices have plunged, companies are slashing spending and demand for fuel is being crushedby an epic economic lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now, analysts warn the meltdown in crude demand could also test the limits of storage capacity worldwide, further damaging prices and forcing companies tohaltproduction.

The situation hit home again this past week when the United States reported its biggest weekly inventory build on record. Oil prices tumbledagain this morning,withconcerns about storage capacity making headlines.

"Demand is disappearing overnight, but oil production is going to take longer to react," Aaron Brady, vice president of energy oil market services at IHS Markit, told CBC News.

The size of this globalimbalance is large enough, Brady said, that he thinks most of the storage could fill up over the coming weeks and months.

"It's happening at lightspeed," Brady said.

Potential production cuts

The implicationsof storage reachingtank tops would be significant. Producers that couldn't sell their oil because of crashing demand and are unable to find places to store it would have to slam the brakes.

"This lack of storage is going to cause shut-ins of production," Brady said.

Quiet streets are seen in Ottawa's ByWard Market after people were told to stay home in March. Demand for fuel has fallen dramatically due to the pandemic. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

For operators in Canada's oilsands, the situation would be particularly painful shouldthey be faced withshutting insome of theircomplex production. Alberta Premier Jason Kenney noted last week that, in some cases, shutting down oilsandsoperations can cause permanent damage to thereservoirs,jeopardizingbillions of dollars of assets.

Much of the focus today is on what's happening in the U.S., the primary destination for Canada's oil.

Total commercial storagein the U.S. stands at about 653 million barrels, or some 780 million barrels including pipeline fills and crude-in-transit.

Net stocks of crude held at refineries and tank farms amounted to 375 million barrels a little more than a week ago, implying storage facilities were about 57 per centfull, according to Reuters.

It's believedthe system could absorbcrude at the current rate for a few more weeks, and longer if the inflow is slowed by production cuts from OPEC and its allies as well as U.S. and Canadian producers.

Western Canada storage under pressure

But some market watchers say if the global oil market remains oversupplied into summer,storage could start to become a more significant problem.

Analysts believe storage in western Canada is feeling the pressure, too.

ConsultantsRystad Energy forecast last month thatstorage in the region stood a good chance of running out by the end of March, but the pressure eased somewhat as oil companies began ratcheting back production.

A pumpjack works at a well head on an oil and gas installation in rural Alberta. Storage capacity is under pressure in the region, analysts say. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

"It had days away from being filled up," said Thomas Liles, Rystad senior analyst, in an interview Friday. "I generally do think it tends to be a days-away kind of situation, perpetually, at this point in western Canada."

Liles says that from the beginning of April, there's been a noticeable decoupling in the price of some synthetic grades of oil from the region and the U.S. benchmark, West Texas Intermediate.

"That's a pretty clear indication of the storage pressure building," he said.

U.S. refineries hampered

However, Liles said there are a lot of moving parts, like upstream production levels and how much crude finds its way into the American market.

Unlike the U.S., official information about storage levels inAlbertais not released on a weekly basis, so people looking for timely updates often turn to private firms that use some creative means to gather the data.

Genscape, for example, completesweekly flyovers around key energy hubs, usinginfrared and visual spectrum imagery of individual storage tanks to measure how full they are.

Genscape said Western Canada inventories wereat 30millionbarrels in the final week of March, utilizing47 percent of operational capacity.

"Capacity utilization in Western Canada has not exceeded 67 per cent or dipped lower than 30 per cent since [2011]," it said. "Given this utilization maximum, only 13 millionbarrelsof space remained as of March 27."

Hampered U.S. refinery demand could lead to storage builds in Western Canada in April, the firmadded.

"Many refineries have cut runs, which cuts demand for Canadian barrels, and that potentially backs into terminals in Western Canada," said Genscape analyst Dylan White.

Global logistics to be tested

Globally, the situation is also a concern.

The International Energy Agency said last week that the build-up in oil stocks in the first half of the year threatens to overwhelm the logistics of the oil industry ships, pipelines and storage tanks in the coming weeks.

"We estimate that available capacity could be saturated in mid-year, based on our market balances," the IEA said.

The agency said floating storage is becoming more expensive as traders compete for ships. Chartering costs for Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCC) have more than doubled since February.

"Never before has the oil industry come this close to testing its logistics capacity to the limit," the agency said.

With files from Reuters

CBC Newsletters

Add some good to your morning and evening.

A variety of newsletters you'll love, delivered straight to you.

...



Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.